New York Daily News

It’s a battle royale of L.A. elites

- BY NANCY DILLON

LOS ANGELES — Mohamed Hadid, the developer dad of supermodel­s Gigi and Bella, was “happy” Friday to finally face a jury in what has become one of the nastiest wars in the rarefied world of luxury real estate, his lawyer said.

Clad in a tightly tailored black suit and his signature chin-length bob, Hadid appeared in a Santa Monica courtroom as the long-delayed trial over his soon-to-be demolished $50 million Bel Air “spec” house, dubbed the “Starship Enterprise” by suing neighbors, began.

“It’s important for you to know Mr. Hadid is happy to be here. He welcomes this trial,” lawyer Jeff Reeves said in his opening statement, calling his client “a unique master-class home designer” who builds “works of art.”

“This case is going to be talking about the most shocking violation of Los Angeles building and safety code that city investigat­ors had ever seen,” Gary Lincenberg, the lawyer representi­ng the two plaintiff couples living below the mega-mansion countered.

While the neighbors accuse Hadid of building an illegal monstrosit­y by using a second set of secret plans, false walls, a trap door, bribes and lookouts, Hadid claims he was the subject of a $3.5 million “shakedown” and “vengeance” campaign orchestrat­ed by one of the plaintiffs.

Not long after Hadid, 72, started the project in 2011, the telegenic tycoon who appeared on “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” alongside ex-wife Yolanda Hadid said he hoped it would be his modern masterpiec­e, capable of fetching more than $100 million.

With an exterior clad in Carrera marble and glass, the home would boast a 5,000-bottle wine cellar, an infinity-edge pool with views to the ocean and possibly even the largest home-based IMAX theater ever built.

But complaints, a criminal investigat­ion by city officials, a misdemeano­r “no contest” plea by Hadid, tear-down orders and the fraud and public nuisance lawsuit followed.

In their June 2018 lawsuit, the plaintiff couples claimed Hadid built a “blatantly illegal” structure, “essentiall­y a small hotel,” atop an “unstable hillside,” leaving them in “constant fear.”

In his countersui­t, Hadid, claimed plaintiff neighbor Joseph Horacek tried to extort him for $3.5 million after researchin­g his celebrity pedigree.

Both sides are asking for what could be millions in damages.

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